Marvel is an Elasticsearch management tool. This tool is free for
development use but requires a license to be used in production.
Marvel is an Elasticsearch management tool. This tool is free for
development use but requires a license to be used in production.
This port takes plain text files like ASCII as input, and outputs
mark files such as HTML or (unsupported) LaTeX.
btparse is a C library for parsing and processing BibTeX files.
It provides a lexical scanner and LR parser (constructed by PCCTS),
both of which are efficient and offer good error detection and
recovery; a set of functions for traversing the AST (abstract
syntax tree) generated by the parser; and utility functions for
manipulating strings according to BibTeX conventions.
emacs-wiki enables you to create and use hyperlinks and simple
formatting in plain text files, and to optionally publish your pages as
HTML.
On the surface, Enchant appears to be a generic spell checking library. You
can request dictionaries from it, ask if a word is correctly spelled, get
corrections for a misspelled word, etc...
Beneath the surface, Enchant is a whole lot more - and less - than that.
You'll see that Enchant isn't really a spell checking library at all.
"What's that?" you ask. Well, Enchant doesn't try to do any of the work
itself. It's lazy, and requires backends to do most of its dirty work. Looking
closer, you'll see the Enchant is more-or-less a fancy wrapper around the
dlopen() system call. Enchant steps in to provide uniformity and conformity
on top of these libraries, and implement certain features that may be lacking
in any individual provider library. Everything should "just work" for any and
every definition of "just working."
CL-PPCRE is a fast, Perl compatible implementation of regular expressions
written in portable, ANSI-compliant Common Lisp.
code2html converts a program source code to syntax highlighted
HTML. It may be called as a CGI script and can also handle include
commands in HTML files.
Support for the following languages:
Ada, Awk, C, C++, HTML, Java, JavaScript, m4, Makefile,
Pascal, Perl, SQL, ruby, povray, and groff.
The grep command searches one or more input files for lines containing a match
to a specified pattern. By default, grep prints the matching lines.
This dictionary client provides access to a dictionary server (as
defined in RFC 2229) from within Emacs or XEmacs.
It supports utf-8 (currently available in Emacs 21) and allows to
follow links within the definitions.